Welcome, Val — and thank you for trusting us with something this tender so early in the knowing.
What you described — the truth hidden under thick layers of shame for a whole life, and then finally seeing it — is one of the most profound things a person can go through, and you said it beautifully. A lot of us know exactly that feeling: the strange mix of *how did I not see this* and *of course, it was always there.* Naming it, even just to yourself, even just two weeks ago, took real courage. However things unfold from here, you've already done the hardest part, which is telling yourself the truth.
I want to say something gently about the decision you've made to stay in the man role, and I want to be clear up front: it's your decision, and it's a legitimate one. People in your situation make exactly that choice for love of their families and the lives they've built, and there's no judgment here for it — none. You know your marriage, your family, and what you treasure better than anyone here ever could.
The only thing I'd offer — and offer lightly — is that you're two weeks into this. You don't have to have the rest of your life sorted right now. "Forever, no matter the personal cost" is a heavy thing to carry, and decisions made in the first rush of a realization this big have a way of staying open longer than they first feel. You're allowed to keep feeling your way. You're allowed to not know yet. And it isn't only ever a choice between "transition fully" and "live as a man forever and pay any cost" — there's a wide, quiet middle that a lot of people find their way into, made of small things shared honestly with the people they love, at whatever pace the marriage can hold. Where you land is entirely yours to discover. I just don't want you to feel locked into the heaviest version of it on day fourteen.
And because you used the words yourself — *the personal cost* — I'll just say this kindly: your wellbeing is part of the equation too. Not more important than the people you love, but not nothing, either. The folks here who've walked the staying-in-role path can tell you honestly what it costs and what makes it bearable, and that's worth hearing from people who've actually lived it rather than figuring it out alone.
Which brings me to what you came for. You'll find a lot of company here — members who've stayed in role for their families, members who realized late, spouses navigating exactly this with the people they love. Look through the boards on relationships and significant others, and the threads on coming to this later in life. Your people are here, in more than one configuration.
Take your time, Val. There's no schedule, no test, and no wrong pace. We're glad you found us.
Welcome home.
— Susan💜